Edward Rodes

Sir Edward Rodes (c. 1600 – 19 February 1666),[1] of Great Houghton, Yorkshire, served as sheriff of Yorkshire and colonel of horse under Cromwell; he was also a member of Cromwell's privy council, sheriff of Perthshire, and represented Perth in the parliaments of 1656-8 and 1659-1660. Sir Edward's sister Elizabeth was third wife and widow of Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford.[2][3]

Contents

Biography

Notwithstanding the near connection which subsisted between Sir Edward Rodes and the Earl of Stratford (his sister Elizabeth was Stafford's third wife and widow), there was a wide difference in the political and religious views of each. Few entered more eagerly into the objects contemplated by the Long Parliament, when affairs were advancing to a crisis; and it was for the most part to Sir Edward Rodes, and his two friends the Hothams,[4] that the scheme, for maintaining the peace of Yorkshire (the Treaty of Neutrality), arranged by the two great parties at Rothwell on 29 September, before the war began, was frustrated. Sir Edward's zeal that may have be quickened by personal injury—One of the stipulations at the treaty was that reparation should be made to "Sir Edward Rodes for the injury done him"—for at the beginning of September, 1643, an attack was made on his house at Great Houghton, by a party of royalists under the command of Captain Grey, when, according to the diurnals of the time, all the outhouses were burnt, his goods plundered to the amount of £600, his lady uncivilly treated, some of his servants wounded, and one slain.[5]

Of all the gentry of Yorkshire, there were only two dissenters, on the parliament side, to that engagement of neutrality, young Holham and Sir Edward Rhodes who, although of better quality, was not so much known or considered as the other; but they quickly found seconds enough when the parliament refused to ratify the treaty, and declared it to be injurious to the common cause.
Clarendon History of the Rebellion.[6]

Later during the First Civil War Rodes was taken into custody by Parliament, and with the Hothams committed to the Tower of London, but as nothing could be proved against him he was liberated,[7] (Sir John Hotham and his son, John Hotham the younger, were beheaded for treason after they were found guilty of conspiring to hand Hull over the Royalists).

During the Second Civil War, Royalists gained control of Pontefract Castle and started to plunder and capture prominent local Parliamentarians. To counter the threat, the Parliamentary committee of the militia of Yorkshire appointed Sir Edward with Sir Henry Cholmley to levy troops and advance on Pontefract Castle. They were ordered to invest the castle, but if their forces were insufficiently strong to besiege of the castle, then they to endeavour to keep in the garrison in the castle and to protect and preserve the surrounding countryside. It seems that Cholmley took overall command while Rodes commanded the cavalry,[8] as Sir Rodes was ordered by Oliver Cromwell to pursue the Duke of Hamilton, the commander of the combined English Royalist and Scottish Coventer armies after his defeat by Cromwell and his New Model Army at the Battle of Preston.

At the end of August on his return from Scotland Cromwell took overall command for the sieges of Scarborough and Pontefract (at which point Rodes came under his direct command again). Cromwell reinforced the besiegers at Pontefract so that the Parliamentarians now had five thousand men and Sir Edward's squadrons besieging the castle.

That the siege of Pontefract Castle was ineffective was highlighted when on 31 October Colonel Thomas Rainsborough was killed at Doncaster, by a party of Cavaliers who sallied out of Pontefract, to capture him, but when he shouted for his guard and attempted to defend himself with a pistol, they cut him down and returned to the castle. Rainsborough was on his way to take command of the siege which was proving to be a difficult fortress to subdue as it was "[...] one of the strongest inland garrisons in the kingdom".[9][10] Cromwell took direct command of the siege and fully invested the castle with lines of circumvallation. Cromwell had to leave on other business and so General Lambert took command on 4 December. The Royalist garrison finally surrendered on 24 March 1649.[11]

During the Interregnum Rodes served as High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1650, and was commissioned as a colonel of horse under Cromwell in 1654; he was also a member of Cromwell's privy council.It would seem that Rodes was much in Scotland during the protectorate,[12] for he was sheriff of Perthshire, and represented Perth in the parliaments of 1656-8 and 1659–1660 and at the same time that his son was returned for Liolithgow, Stirling, and Clackmannan.[2][5]

After the restoration he was allowed to live quietly at Great Houghton, which became an asylum to the ejected ministers, who refused to comply with the Act of Uniformity 1662.[5][7]

Sir John's first large post-Restoration loan, of £2500 1n 1661, was to Sir Edward Rhodes of Great Houghton, formerly Stephen Bright's debtor and a fellow Parliamentarian. Rhodes discharged some of this debt in 1664 by selling by selling property in Great Houghton to Sir John for £1,720. He then leased the land back from Sir John, paying the rent and the rest of the loan in annual instalments of £250.
—Peter Roebuck.[13]

Rodes was still living at Great Houghton when Sir William Dugdale's visited, but died soon after.[3][5][7]

Family

Edward Rode's grandfather was Francis Rodes, of Stavely Woodthorpe, one of the justices of the Common Pleas in the time of Elizabeth. This gentleman built Barlborough Hall in 1683, but died at his residence at Stavely Woodthorpe a few years after its completion. He married first Elizabeth, daughter of Brian Sandford, esq. of Thorp Salvine, in Yorkshire, and had, with her daughters and two sons:

1) John, his heir, b. 1562.
2) Peter, of Hickleton.[5]

Francis Rodes married secondly, Mary, daughter of Francis Charlton, esq. of Appley, in Shropshire, with whom he had, with other issue, a son, Godfrey (Sir), of Great Houghton, knighted at Havering, 13 July, 1615, who married four wives, and left, with other issue, including a daughter, Elizabeth, the third wife and widow of the ill-fated Thomas Wentworth Earl of Strafford, and a son and successor, Sir Edward Rodes of Great Houghton.[5]

Edward Rodes married Mary (or Margaret), the daughter of Sir Hammond Whichcote and Millicent Markham in 1629. They had a number of children, but only one son, William married and had children. William had two sons Godfrey (d. unmarried 1709) and William Rodes, esq. of Great Houghton, the last male heir of this branch of the family, who died unmarried in 1740, leaving his two sisters, his co-heirs.[5]

Cultural influence

Edward Rodes's house is mentioned in Sir Walter Scott's "Old Ballads". It is either about a house in Scotland that the family owned or about the 1642 Cavalier attack on the house in Great Houghton.[14][15][16]

The House of Rodes on the Hill.
The Gordon then his bugle blew.
And said, "awa, awa.
The house of Rhodes is all on fire,
I hold it time to g'a"

Notes

  1. ^ Also: Sir Edward Rhodes
  2. ^ a b  Pollard, Albert Frederick (1885–1900). "Rodes, Francis". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 
  3. ^ a b Genealogy of John & Sir Godfrey Rhodes of RI, & Yorkshire, ENG. Retrieved 18 March 2010. DOD month and children listed by Sir William Dugdale after his visitation.
  4. ^ "young Hotham, his cousin [?]" (Barnard p. 315)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Burke (1838), pp. 563,564. A footnote entry quotes: Hunter's History of Doncaster
  6. ^ Clarendon, The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England: To which is Added an Historical View of the Affairs of Ireland, Book VI, Clarendon press, 1826 p. 438
  7. ^ a b c Fox, p. 243
  8. ^ Fox p. 234,248
  9. ^ Staff. History and Records of the Duchy of Lancaster: Pontefract Castle, West Yorkshire, Duchy of Lancaster
  10. ^ Fox pp.234,251
  11. ^ Fox, pp. 251–261
  12. ^ Rhodes may have had family connections there (Burke p.564)
  13. ^ Roebuck (1990), p. 214
  14. ^ Barnard, p. 315
  15. ^ Burke, p. 564
  16. ^ Arthur Quiller-Couch, ed. 1919. The Oxford Book of English Verse: 1250–1900. Anonymous. 17th Cent. 374. Edom o' Gordon

References

Attribution